He Turned The Hourglass Every Day. The Black Sand Exposed Him-tantan

The hourglass had always looked wrong in Michael’s bedroom.

Most bedside tables in that neighborhood held pill organizers, reading glasses, church bulletins, or half-finished cups of coffee.

Michael’s held a narrow wooden hourglass filled with black sand.

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It stood beside his lamp like a little warning.

The first time Tyler turned it over, Michael thought it was a joke too mean to deserve a response.

The second time, he understood it was a habit.

By the third, he knew it was a ritual.

Tyler came every morning at 9:10.

He never knocked anymore.

That was the first thing Michael noticed after he came home from the hospital, that his nephew no longer acted like a guest.

Tyler used the key Michael had given him during the chest-pain scare in February, the same key he had handed over because family was supposed to mean help before pride.

At the time, Tyler had been charming.

He had picked up prescriptions, carried grocery bags from the driveway, tightened the loose handrail on the porch, and called from the pharmacy counter asking whether Michael wanted the sugar-free cough drops or the regular kind.

Neighbors said Michael was lucky to have him.

Michael had believed that for a while.

Loneliness makes ordinary kindness look bigger than it is.

It makes a ride home from the hospital feel like devotion.

It makes a young man with a spare key feel like safety.

The morning after Michael’s discharge, Tyler placed the hourglass on the nightstand and smiled.

‘For perspective,’ he said.

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